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Skype for iPhone available everywhere but Canada

Skype for iPhone available everywhere but Canada

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 30 Mar 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Find out why the Web-based phone service’s new iPhone application won’t be available for Canadian users. Plus, why enterprise IT managers wouldn’t have cared either way

Skype Technologies S.A. will make its highly anticipated debut on the Apple Inc. iPhone Tuesday, but Canadian users will be one of the only countries in the world left shut out.

“There is a patent-license issue in Canada which prevents us from making Skype available on the iPhone,” Chaim Haas, a spokesperson on behalf of Skype, told ComputerWorld Canada in an e-mail.

But while the new app will surely be a hit with consumers worldwide, industry analysts don’t expect to see the same enthusiasm among enterprise IT departments – which means Canadian businesses won’t be missing much.

The free Skype iPhone app will allow non-Canadian users to make Skype-to-Skype calls at no cost, call landlines or non-Skype cell phones at a reduced rate, and use the tool’s instant messaging service.

A BlackBerry application of the Web-based phone service is expected in May, but Canada will again be missing out, as important features such as Skype Out or Skype-to-Skype calls will be absent. However, Canadian BlackBerry users will be able to use the application to receive calls from other Skype users and for instant messaging services.

Amit Kaminer, a telecom analyst at the SeaBoard Group’s Toronto office, said the new Skype for iPhone application would only have appealed to the small business community anyway, such as those with a tiny pool of travelling workers. However, missing features such as teleconferencing, file transfer and voice mail capabilities would have forced even these users to wait for a future release, he said.

“Another drawback is that the iPhone cannot do multi-tasking,” Kaminer said. Because applications like Skype can not run in the background, he explained, it will take away from the overall experience.

Kaminer suspects that users will have to be actively using the application to receive notifications that their friends or co-workers are logging online or if they have an incoming call.

Mark Tauschek, senior research analyst with London, Ont.-based Info-Tech Research Group Ltd., agreed that the solution needs work and added that it would be nearly impossible to manage its use at the enterprise level, especially when running on an iPhone rather than the future BlackBerry version.

“Travelling workers will often have a SIP-based client that they can connect to their own IP telephony infrastructure with,” he added. “This (Skype app) doesn’t add much, other than a little bit of a management pain in the neck.”

Small businesses currently using Skype on their desktops will probably be fine with it, Tauschek said. The mobile app is going to use the same peering network and the same encryption technology that customers have come to expect.

“But because of the way the peering network works, your voice stream will go through the node of some guy sitting on a Rogers network in his basement, so that’s a little disconcerting for large enterprises,” he added.


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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Comments (6)

STA
by JM 3/31/2009 12:00:00 AMThat's a real shame. I was really waiting for this. Guess someone wants to turn it into a money grab.
Patent issues
by Dominique Vidal 3/31/2009 12:00:00 AMThe reason it is not offered in canada is because of some 'Patent issues'. Some sneaky canadian company has a patent for similar technology and want money. I expect that Skype just isn't caving in.
Skype works
by Maximillion 4/20/2009 12:00:00 AMI got Skype working on my iPhone I am on Rogers as well. The program. Skype itself might not work, but if you get Fring there is a skype included that works. I heard if you jailbreak your phone the. You can get an app that let's you even use skype over 3G.
Business Users not interested?
by WD 4/1/2009 12:00:00 AMHmmm... lets be honest. Slap a Blackberry or iPhone and a laptop in the hands of an executive and then send them on a road-trip far from home and ask them not to crank up the long distance bills due to budget constraints and what do you think they would ask you? 'Can I install Skype so I can call my spouse/friends/family.' Of course business is interested in Skype. If the user can use it on their Blackberry/iPhone/laptop and avoid hearing complaints about making too many non-business calls, they'll be happy, and their boss will be happy.
Programmer
by Johnny canuck 4/7/2009 12:00:00 AMSkype is a far superior solurion to the teleconference my company employs for doing web deployments
Disappointing
by MFB 3/31/2009 12:00:00 AMI'm disappointed that this application is not being released in Canada. What exactly is the issue with a Canadian release? Does it have to do with Rogers? I personally have been waiting for this release since hearing about it last week, and would find it very useful for making long distance calls over wifi on my iphone.
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